Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaArmy deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.Army deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.Army deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.
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This one starts off with our hero Captain Kaleb of the US army discovering that his wife has been raped and flayed by a bunch of Apaches. After putting her out of her misery, Kaleb goes nuts at his superior officer as they were supposed to be guarding the mission where his wife was working. After shooting his superior officer in the leg, Kaleb heads off for the wilderness to go rogue and kill loads of Apaches.
Two years later, General John Houston turns up and demands that they find Kaleb for a special mission (They haven't seen him in that time, but it takes about five minutes to find him!) and promises him a pardon if he'll take a team of men over the border and wipe out a certain Apache army that's been troubling the US – but who will make up this Dirty Dozen-or-so? There's Chuck Connors (explosives expert, smoking), Ricardo Montalban (Native Indian, overblown philosophy), Woody Strode (Engineering, punch ups), Slims Pickens (good ol' Southern hospitality, tobacco chewing), Ian Bannen (Sarcasm, full of Buckfast) and some other guys. They all do what a Dirty Unspecified Quantity always do – start training! This being the seventies and not the eighties, we get a fairly long training scene instead of a montage.
After all that crap, it's time to go on the mission, but wait, Kaleb's superior officer has something to tell them, and I'd love to tell you what that is, but just as he's about to speak the Mill Creek version of the film immediately cuts to the Dirty Group heading for their destination. Thanks Mill Creek! Thanks also for the bit where Kaleb tells the group to shut up and ride in silence when no one was talking.
As you'd expect from films like this, this lot don't get on very well and have a few punch ups on the way, and not everyone will make it to the epic battle at the end. In tone this plays out a lot more like an American Western than an Italian one (although it's as violent as an Italian one!), which means it wasn't quite as daft, although I loved that bit where they are hoisting a donkey up a cliff face when the Apaches ride by, causing everyone to dive for cover and leave the donkey hanging there, looking genuinely perplexed.
Moving and spectacular Western with story and script by prestigious Claif Huffaker in "Dirty Dozen" style with assaults, noisy action, marauding Apache attacks, violence and gorgeous outdoors from Spain. Stars Bekim Fehmiu who creates especially a memorable role giving acceptable acting as a deserter captain who is given the amnesty in exchange for leading the misfit team, as the avenger Victor Kaleb is promoted again as an Army Captain, being offered the pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to command a special forces bunch. He is well accompanied by a great and large support cast with plenty of familiar faces playing the especially trained soldiers, such as Albert Salmi, Chuck Connors, Ricardo Montalban, Slim Pickens, Patrick Wayne, Richard Crenna, and John Huston as a stubborn General, adding other minor roles for Remo De Angelis, Fausto Tozzi and Mimmo Palmar as cruel Apache chief.
It contains at atmospheric cinematography by Aldo Tonti, though a perfect remastering being really necessary. Shot on location in El Torcal de Antequera, Malaga and Almeria, Andalucia, Spain and Lazio, Rome, Italy. As well as rousing and stirring musical score by Piero Piccioni. The motion picture well produced by Dino De Laurentiis was professionally directed by Burt Kennedy. He is mainly known for being writer in Budd Boetticher western fims. As Burt also directed a lot of Westerns as The good guys and the bad guys, The train robbers, The war wagon, More wild wild west, The rounders, Return of the Seven, The wild wild west revisited, The dynamite and the gold, Hannie Coulder, The Alamo 13 days to glory, and his two most successful westerns : Support you local gunfighter and Support you local sheriff. In addition, Kennedy directed others genres including films as Killer inside me, All the kind strangers, Trouble with spies, Big bad John, and Suburban commando. Rating 6/10. Acceptable and passable Western.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWhen Burt Kennedy came on board, he wanted Henry Fonda, Martin Balsam, Ernest Borgnine or Martin Landau or Karl Malden for the part of Gen. Miles. Malden looked for $250,000 plus $1,500 a day expenses. A much cheaper John Huston got the part.
- BlooperAt 38:50, the captain says to be there at daybreak. Yet the next scene when they are preparing to depart, the height of the sun is at least 10 am.
- Citazioni
Captain Viktor Kaleb: O'Toole made two mistakes. He didn't test his skills...
Cpt. Crawford: And he yelled when he was falling.
Captain Viktor Kaleb: An Apache wouldn't.
Cpt. Crawford: Damn it! If a man is dying, he has a right to be a little bit disturbed by it!
Captain Viktor Kaleb: Not if he cares anything about the men he was with.
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- The Deserter
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 40 minuti
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- 2.39 : 1